physical size of the device inconsistent with superblock, after RAID problems
Gavin Flower
gavinflower at yahoo.com
Fri Feb 18 03:50:48 UTC 2011
--- On Fri, 18/2/11, NeilBrown <neilb at suse.de> wrote:
> From: NeilBrown <neilb at suse.de>
> Subject: Re: physical size of the device inconsistent with superblock, after RAID problems
> To: "Gavin Flower" <gavinflower at yahoo.com>
> Cc: ext3-users at redhat.com, linux-raid at vger.kernel.org
> Date: Friday, 18 February, 2011, 14:51
> On Thu, 17 Feb 2011 15:53:11 -0800
> (PST) Gavin Flower <gavinflower at yahoo.com>
> wrote:
>
> > Hi Neil,
> >
> > My attempted post to ext3-users at redhat.com,
> had not been published there (even though I had emailed it 4
> days ago!), as at a minute ago.
> >
> > I finally bit the bullet and went ahead.
> >
> > I accepted the fixes put forward by fsck associated
> with bitmap differences, and rebooted.
> >
> > Still problems.
> >
> > Still had the discrepancy in the file size. So I ran
> the command:
> >
> > resize2fs -p /dev/md1 76799616
> >
> > I used the smaller of the 2 block counts, as:
> > (a) I needed to reduce the file system size, because I
> had already reduced the RAID size (I _SHOULD_ have done this
> first, before resizing the RAID), and
> > (b) it is reported as the 'physical' size of the
> device, so it is likely to be the correct value IMHO
> >
> > The system the came up successfully after a reboot,
> and I was able to log in as normal.
> >
> > There appeared to be no apparent loss of data, not
> that I did an exhaustive systematic check. However, several
> users have logged on successfully, and it is playing its
> part as gateway to the Internet, and squid appears to be
> providing its normal functionality.
> >
> > Neil, your help and encouragement was/is greatly
> appreciated!
> >
>
> Excellent! I'm glad you found a way through.
> As you didn't really trim very much from your device it is
> certainly possible
> that no critical data was there. Quite possibly
> resize2fs would have told
> you if there was (I certainly hope it would have done).
>
> NeilBrown
>
Hi Neil,
Having about 26% spare capacity (see output of the df) md1 (the problematic RAID 6), probably (?) meant that nothing was likely to be lost by trimming a tiny fraction of a percent from the end.
However, since the md1 device actually resides on 5 real physical drives, reality is almost certainly more complicated! - possibly, hence the bit map discrepancies (now I'm firmly outside my area of expertise!).
# df
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
/dev/md2 1097254408 27547660 1013969456 3% /
tmpfs 4097108 772 4096336 1% /dev/shm
/dev/sda1 1032088 129800 849860 14% /boot
/dev/md1 302377920 212244524 74773476 74% /data
# mdadm --detail /dev/md1
/dev/md1:
Version : 0.90
Creation Time : Thu Dec 3 13:05:02 2009
Raid Level : raid6
Array Size : 307198464 (292.97 GiB 314.57 GB)
Used Dev Size : 102399488 (97.66 GiB 104.86 GB)
Raid Devices : 5
Total Devices : 5
Preferred Minor : 1
Persistence : Superblock is persistent
Update Time : Fri Feb 18 15:09:50 2011
State : clean
Active Devices : 5
Working Devices : 5
Failed Devices : 0
Spare Devices : 0
Layout : left-symmetric
Chunk Size : 512K
UUID : 6f1176ae:a0ad6cac:bfe78010:bc810f04
Events : 0.3389728
Number Major Minor RaidDevice State
0 8 2 0 active sync /dev/sda2
1 8 18 1 active sync /dev/sdb2
2 8 66 2 active sync /dev/sde2
3 8 50 3 active sync /dev/sdd2
4 8 34 4 active sync /dev/sdc2
#
Cheers,
Gavin
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